The Single Eye Not Biblical?

I have been under attack again by a fellow believer about my connection between The Tree of Life and the single eye in Matthew 6:22 and Luke 11:34 in the KJV, who claims there is no biblical connection and therefore that I am a false teacher.
This is a very serious accusation against me, by a fellow believer. I am a man who loves Jesus more than most and proclaims His glory above all else we experience in life. How can anyone construe my writings as a false teacher? And this from a man who worships Israel before Jesus? His hypocrisy is dripping.
I should defend myself on this one, though, not because I need defending, but because I am about to launch an intensive pilgrimage program in search of Jesus Plus ZERO. This individual has threatened to rally others and shut me down (how pathetic!), and my potential fellow pilgrims need to understand my motives.
Why the Single Eye Leads Us Back to the Tree of Life
For this individual, the connection between Jesus’ teaching on the single eye in Matthew 6:22 and Luke 11:34 (KJV only) and the Tree of Life in Genesis 2 is a step too far. His concern goes like this:
“Jesus never mentions the Tree of Life in Matthew 6. You are reading something into the text.”
It’s a fair statement.
Let us examine it in the light of Jesus’ statement to the Pharisees in John 5:39:
John 5:39 LSB “You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; it is these that bear witness about Me;
And the answer is simple:
No—Matthew 6:22 is not a direct quotation of Genesis.
But it is part of a spiritual pattern.
And life exists in the spiritual patterns, not the plain reading of text.
John 4:23-24 LSB “But an hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth; for such people the Father seeks to be His worshipers. (24) “God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.”
This article explains that pattern.
Not through speculation.
Not through mystical overlay.
But through the way Scripture itself uses imagery, contrast, and canonical echoes to reveal the posture of the human heart.
Let’s walk through it slowly.
1. The Single Eye Is About Receiving From One Source
Jesus says:
“If your eye is single, your whole body will be full of light.”
— Matthew 6:22 KJV
In Scripture, the “eye” is consistently a metaphor for:
- the heart
- the inner orientation
- the source of perception
- the direction of trust
This is why Paul prays:
“The eyes of your heart being enlightened.”
— Ephesians 1:18
And why the Book of Judges repeatedly says:
“Everyone did what was right in his own eyes.”
The “eye” is the inner faculty that determines what source you are receiving from.
A single eye means:
- one source
- one center
- one orientation
- one trust
- one light
An evil eye means:
- mixture
- duality
- divided perception
- two competing sources
Jesus is not giving ophthalmology advice.
He is describing the inner posture of a disciple.
2. The Tree of Life Is Also About Receiving From One Source
In Eden, humanity was presented with two trees:
The Tree of Life
- life from one source
- God as the centre
- simplicity
- trust
- dependence
- union
The Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil
- life from two sources
- mixture
- self‑determination
- independence
- divided perception
- duality
The issue was never the fruit.
It was the source.
The Tree of Life represents receiving life from God alone.
The other tree represents receiving life from a mixture of good and evil, apart from God.
This is the same contrast Jesus makes in Matthew 6:
- single eye → one source
- evil eye → two sources
The imagery is different.
The structure is identical.
3. Jesus Frequently Uses Edenic Imagery Without Quoting Genesis
This is where the connection becomes not only plausible but expected.
Jesus constantly draws from Genesis symbolically:
- “good tree / bad tree” (Matthew 7:17)
- “fruit” imagery (Matthew 12:33)
- “from the beginning it was not so” (Matthew 19:8)
- “the devil was a murderer from the beginning” (John 8:44)
- “the thief comes to steal, kill, and destroy” (John 10:10)
Jesus rarely quotes Genesis directly.
But He constantly echoes it.
He teaches in patterns, contrasts, and symbols that trace back to Eden.
So when Jesus speaks of:
- one eye vs two eyes
- light vs darkness
- simplicity vs mixture
- God vs mammon
He is operating within the same symbolic world as Genesis 2.
4. The Single Eye and the Tree of Life Share the Same Canonical Pattern
Here is the heart of the connection.
Single Eye → One Source → Light → Life
- undivided perception
- simplicity
- God as the only centre
- receiving from one source
- fullness of light
Tree of Life → One Source → Life → Union
- undivided dependence
- simplicity
- God as the only source
- receiving life from Him alone
- fullness of life
Now the parallel becomes clear:
- The single eye is the inner posture of the Tree of Life.
- The evil eye is the inner posture of the other tree.
Both are about the source.
Both are about orientation.
Both are about trust.
Both are about perception.
Both are about receiving.
The connection is not lexical.
It is thematic, structural, and canonical.
This is how biblical theology works.
5. The Evil Eye Mirrors the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil
Jesus says:
“If your eye is evil, your whole body will be full of darkness.”
— Matthew 6:23
The “evil eye” is not about morality.
It is about a mixture.
It is the divided inner life.
The attempt to navigate reality through two sources:
- God
- and self
- light
- and darkness
- trust
- and control
This is precisely the dynamic of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil:
- good
- and evil
- discerned apart from God
- mixture
- duality
- divided perception
The evil eye is the Edenic fracture inside the human heart.
The single eye is the Edenic restoration.
6. The Early Church Read Scripture This Way
The earliest Christian interpreters—long before modern literalism—read Scripture canonically:
- patterns
- echoes
- symbols
- typology
- thematic unity
They saw Eden everywhere in Jesus’ teaching because Jesus Himself taught that way.
To them, the connection between:
- one source
- one light
- one life
- one center
…was obvious.
I am simply recovering a way of reading the Bible that the early church took for granted.
7. Why This Matters for Formation
This is not an academic exercise.
It is deeply practical.
The Single Eye is not a doctrine.
It is a posture.
It is the heart returning to:
- one source
- one center
- one trust
- one light
- one life
It is the Tree of Life re‑planted in the inner life of the believer.
It is the restoration of simplicity in a world of mixture.
It is the healing of divided perception.
It is the end of spiritual duality.
It is the return to God, who is the only source of life.
Conclusion: The Single Eye Is the Way Back to Life
The connection between the Single Eye and the Tree of Life is not forced.
It is not speculative.
It is not mystical.
It is the natural outflow of reading Scripture the way Jesus and the apostles read it:
- through patterns
- through contrasts
- through symbols
- through canonical echoes
The Single Eye is the heart returning to the posture humanity lost in Eden:
receiving from one source—God Himself.
And that is the essence of the Tree of Life.
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